Wendell
Actually, as Ken said, to write the attribute value you should use
xsl:value-of. xsl:apply-templates should not work: if it does, your
processor is not being conformant, and your code will break in
another processor.
actually the default template for attributes does the same as value-of
in this case.
Sometimes they bend the rules and introduce some
sort of structure into attribute values, but when they do, it's
always simple enough to parse easily (for example tokenized values,
or maybe tokenized values with labels), since this generally has to
be done in the application not by the XML parser.
Of course it is possible to parse reasonably complicated "quoted html in
attributes" just using xslt if you want to avoid extension functions.
Just bash the attribute value with enough regular expressions and
generate some element nodes... (see htmlparse.xsl for some examples of
this).
David
________________________________________________________________________
The Numerical Algorithms Group Ltd is a company registered in England
and Wales with company number 1249803. The registered office is:
Wilkinson House, Jordan Hill Road, Oxford OX2 8DR, United Kingdom.
This e-mail has been scanned for all viruses by Star. The service is
powered by MessageLabs.
________________________________________________________________________
--~------------------------------------------------------------------
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
To unsubscribe, go to: http://lists.mulberrytech.com/xsl-list/
or e-mail: <mailto:xsl-list-unsubscribe(_at_)lists(_dot_)mulberrytech(_dot_)com>
--~--